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poeticdan
Dan Husain
India, Delhi, Delhi

Words: 315
Access: Public
Comments: 4

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Coffee in Times of War...

Just the other day a friend asked
Have you ever tried war poetry?
War, I said, I haven't seen one.
I was only born in seventy-one.
I've often seen pictures '
Oh why pictures! Even a painting
in a restaurant once '
of a Sikh General
making the Pakistanis
sign the surrender.
And then I grew up
reading lessons, history
about World War One and World War Two,
Plassey, Panipat, Waterloo,
War & Peace, The Day of Armistice,
the ancient tales of the Mahabharata,
the Muharram majlises, Karbala.

But then who needs textbooks?
Television brings live - Beirut.
And if this isn't enough there are movies '
A Bridge Too Far, Platoon, Killing Fields.

But no, I have never seen a war.
I don't know what it means
to sit through blackouts, power outages,
to hold my breath and wait
for a bomb to detonate.
I don't know what it means
to have splinters of plastic and tin
pierce through my clothes, skin.
I don't know what it means
to lose an eye, to lose a limb.
I haven't seen my child without her head.
I don't know what it means
when a mother grieves for her dead.
The closest I have seen a man's guts
split wide open was from a scene
in a movie called Saving Private Ryan.

I don't know what it means
to run from desk to desk
in a dank office corridor
asking for compensation
for a son dead in a war.

I don't know'¦

My words trailed in the wispy heat
of Delhi's August afternoon street.

I am afraid I am not qualified
to consider myself a war poet.

My friend cursed himself
for bringing this topic up,
dunked his biscuit in his coffee,
as I waved to the waiter,
May we have more of these, please!

© Dan Husain
August 23, 2006

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Comments  
xxsasha1xx Comment by: xxsasha1xx - 2007-03-01 08:42
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This is a very descriptive poem. You managed to incorporate book, movies, feelings, actual events.You switched your tone back and forth from on looker to actual "experience. I enjoyed this.
hulshizer Comment by: hulshizer - 2007-01-22 08:33
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Believe me, waiting for that next explosion to be the one ends your life does not make one feel all that poetic, especially at the time. War is hours of boredom interspersed with seconds of terror; pretty much like everyday life now days. you did a fine job with this one.
Jamilah Comment by: Jamilah - 2006-12-07 19:35
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This is excellent. Very strong imagery and a powerful statement. This poem should be read by every young person who is thinking of enlisting.

It's too bad you never wrote a war poem.
fredav Comment by: fredav - 2006-12-07 04:46
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Very, very interesting write. One need not experience war first hand to write a war poem, as you have done so with this piece. The images we see often trigger us to write about something we've never experienced. This is not bad at all.
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